"Astrologically inclined cozy fans will find a lot to like."―Publishers Weekly
Someone is bumping off rock’s wrinkled royalty. The latest victim? Freddie Finger, 63-year-old lead singer for Rocket Fire. Seeking answers, Freddie’s daughter, movie actress Vivian Younger, retains astrologer detective David Lowell to help catch her father’s killer.
Freddie wasn’t well liked, and Lowell has plenty of suspects. Among them are Freddie’s ex-wives, who seem more intent on killing each other than anyone else. And his disgruntled band members, angry because Freddie’s solo career was threatening the band’s future. Then there is his greedy manager, busy promoting the death of a rock star. Or could his killer have been the musician whose career Freddie sabotaged many years ago?
With the help of his red-haired assistant Sarah, master hacker and psychic Mort, and his driver and bodyguard Andy, Lowell sifts through the birth charts of the characters and follows the clues to a surprising ending.
Mitchell Scott Lewis has been a practicing astrologer and teacher in New York City for more than twenty years. For a dozen years, he worked on the Mercantile Exchange as an astro-economist, where he authored a newsletter, “Trading By Starlight.” He has appeared on 20/20 and been quoted in Barron’s, the New York Post and other publications. In his newsletters, radio and TV appearances, and lectures at the Princeton Club from 1999-2009, he successfully predicted a year in advance the rise of oil prices, the exact top of the housing market, the deterioration of the mortgage business, the current recession, and the 2008 stock market crash, all of which happened within days of his predictions. His clientele include leading financiers, health professionals, show business figures and people from all walks of life. He has been invited to lecture at the next United Astrology Conference in 2011, the largest assembly of astrologers in America. Mitchell is also an accomplished jazz pianist and singer-songwriter with a nationally-charted single. His father, to whom this book is dedicated, was Irwin Lewis, novelist and author of dozens of radio and early TV shows, including Suspense Theatre. http://www.mitchastro.com/home.html